Life, 1895-10-31 · page 5 of 18
Life — October 31, 1895 — page 5: what you’re looking at
What you’re looking at
# October Political Cartoon Analysis This page from *Life* magazine presents satirical commentary on early 20th-century political issues: **Monroe Doctrine** (top): A figure representing American policy blocks another nation from crossing, illustrating U.S. resistance to foreign intervention in the Americas. **Yale and Harvard** (left): Appears to mock these elite universities, though context is unclear. **Reform Sentiment in Turkey and China** (center): A large lion represents aggressive expansionism; smaller figures suggest reform movements struggling against this force. **Spain's Slave** (bottom left): Likely references Spain's colonial or labor policies, depicted as enslavement. **Atlanta** and **Catholics Cut of It** (right): Suggest local or sectarian political tensions, though specific references are unclear without additional historical context. The overall theme critiques American foreign policy, imperialism, and domestic inequality.
📄 Transcribed text from this page (OCR, searchable)
Machine-transcribed from the original scan — historical spelling and the odd misread are preserved.
TREVISORS OF THR S. CAROLINA CONSTITUNION STRIKE. OV THE CLAUSE PROHIBITING SLAVERY, VA PRAPID GROWTH of REFORM SENTIMENT =e ——- + IN TURKEY AND al aad <= SPAIN'S SLAVE > (rowonyt musings, of course) «